Outlook English - Print Subscribers Copy Outlook English, 09 July 2018 | Page 18
L I T I GATION RAJ
ARMED M.K. Stalin’s protests are
being construed as ‘criminal force’
What’s Tamil for
Lèse-Majesté?
PTI
Piqued by DMK protests against his ‘overreach’, the
TN governor dusts off a weapon from the IPC arsenal
by G.C. Shekhar in Chennai
L
ORD Macaulay was two years in
his grave when his Indian Penal
Code came into force in 1862. But
his memory was honoured in free
India when Tamil Nadu governor
Banwarilal Purohit threatened to
deploy one of the IPC’s rarely-used pro-
visions against the state’s Opposition
leader and his party cadres for holding
demonstrations against him.
After the DMK’s M.K.Stalin led a flash
protest in front of Raj Bhavan on June 23,
the governor’s office warned that under
Section 124 of the IPC, anyone using
‘criminal force’ to stop governors from
discharging their duties could receive up
to seven years’ imprisonment. While
Stalin’s agitation before the Raj Bhavan
gates was the latest provocation, the gov-
ernor had already been piqued by the
DMK showing him black flags whenever
he visited district headquarters, report-
edly to learn about the various schemes
and projects of the state government.
The DMK had dubbed these ‘unconsti-
tutional reviews’ by the governor a direct
infringement of the rights of the state
government, hence the protests. “The
governor has justified his action as being
constitutional but it is nothing but an
18 OUTLOOK 9 July 2018
indirect show of control by the BJP over
the state administration. Can Governor
Purohit give examples of any other state
governor, say in Madhya Pradesh or West
Bengal, resorting to such reviews?” Stalin
asked pointedly. The governor’s response
was to threaten to unleash Section 124—
but Stalin has continued the black flag
protests undaunted.
“The threat of using Section 124 to curb
a symbolic agitation cannot be viewed
seriously as it can at best remain an empty
Ever since his arrival in
Tamil Nadu in October,
Governor Banwarilal
Purohit has acted as a
power centre, visiting
districts and being
briefed by officials.
threat. Whoever is advising the governor
on such matters is doing him a great dis-
service,” cautions retired High Court
judge K. Chandru. “Section 124 was last
used in the charge-sheet against those
who attacked Parliament in 2001, since it
was the seat of the President, the highest
constitutional authority. To equate some-
thing that extreme and criminal with a
show of black flags is truly laughable,”
observes a senior advocate.
Ever since his arrival in Tamil Nadu in
October 2017, Purohit has let it be known
that he would be an overarching power
centre rather than a textbook governor,
by regularly visiting districts and being
briefed by officials. The Edappadi K.
Palaniswami (EPS) government has cho-
sen to overlook this overreach, not want-
ing to rub the Centre the wrong way. In
fact, state ministers have even justified
Purohit’s visits as part of a governor’s
normal administrative duties. Purohit’s
actions have only added meat to the opp
osition’s charge that the EPS government
is a mere handmaiden to the BJP.
Already facing criticism for appointing
non-Tamils as vice-chancellors of univer-
sities in the state, Purohit found his name
being dragged into a scandal involving a
woman college lecturer caught on tape
allegedly soliciting college girls to do
sexual favours for officials. Even as the
police arrested the lecturer, Purohit app
ointed a retired IAS officer to probe the
tape, which was seen as a diversionary
tactic to scuttle the police investigation
since the lecturer had flaunted her prox-
imity to the governor during her conver-
sations with the girls.
At the height of the controversy, Purohit
even addressed his first press meet and
justified his powers to launch a parallel
probe as the chancellor of Madurai
Kamaraj University. The details of the
probe’s findings remain sealed before the
Madras High Court, while the police are
to perform a voice test of the indicted
lecturer, Nirmala Devi, to establish her
involvement. The tape scandal did little
to enhance Purohit’s image.
But an unfazed Purohit has faced the
onslaught of the state’s opposition p
arties
head on. And the threat to use Section 124
could even see the governor, not the rul-
ing AIADMK, emerge as the DMK’s
enemy number one. O